A Compendium of Case Examples. [Updated September 2010]

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1 ACCME Accreditation Findings Based on the 2006 Accreditation Criteria: A Compendium of Case Examples [Updated September 2010] About ACCME Examples Throughout this document this font is associated with examples. The ACCME is sharing with you examples of providers practices, programs, strategies or procedures as we were able to determine them from the three data sources reviewed during the accreditation process (self study report, interview and performance-in-practice documentation review). These are examples only. The reader should understand that these are not prescribed practices, nor do they represent a list of options from which providers must choose. They are what some providers have chosen to do to fulfill the expectation of the 2006 Accreditation Criteria. They are examples of what the ACCME believes represent practices in keeping with the spirit and word of the Criteria, as well as practices which are not in keeping with the spirit and word of the Criteria. The CME Mission (C1) Criterion 1: The provider has a CME mission statement that includes all of the basic components (CME purpose, content areas, target audience, type of activities, expected results) with expected results articulated in terms of changes in competence, performance, or patient outcomes that will be the result of the program. ACCME note about Criterion 1: The ACCME is looking for explicit information on the five components of the CME mission, in order to understand how the organization intends to change their learners (competence and/or performance and/or patient outcomes) through an overall CME program oriented to a stated purpose. The manner in which the provider intends to achieve these expected results is described in terms of the content areas the CME will address, who the target audience of their educational efforts will be, and what types of activities they will pursue. Compliance is determined when all the components are mentioned and the expected results are articulated in terms of changes in competence, performance, or patient outcomes that will be the result of the program. Example of Compliance with Criterion 1: The [Name deleted] School of Medicine CME program seeks to see beyond the traditional administrative and crediting functions of medical education, and challenges itself to become a catalyst, advocate for, and a provider of education that promotes change, development and improvement. Purpose: Our CME program sees its purpose as providing high-quality, evidence-based educational opportunities that are designed to advance physician competence, enhance practice performance, promote patient safety, and, where possible, improve patient outcomes in the populations served by Page 1 of 27

2 the healthcare providers we educate. Target Audience: We seek to serve not only the educational needs of healthcare professionals (physicians, allied health personnel, basic scientists, and researchers) within our institution but the needs of local, regional, and national healthcare providers and colleagues as well. Types of Activities Provided: As a CME provider at an academic tertiary-care medical center, our educational activities include department-specific, interdepartmental and specialtyspecific conferences, symposia and seminars. These events take the form of live courses, live regularly scheduled series, and live internet activities. The educational design, instructional method and learning format for each event is chosen to best serve the educational needs and learning objectives of the planned educational activity. Content: Included among our educational offerings are updates in clinical medicine and basic science research, reviews of current or best practice recommendations for clinical care, learning modules in quality improvement, procedural and communication skills development exercises, as well as professional development in bioethics, leadership and patient safety. Expected Results: We expect that they will report greater confidence in their approach to clinical problems or express their intent to change their behavior and apply newly acquired strategies in their practice. We expect that when observed our learners will demonstrate competence and the effective use of targeted skills. Finally, if evaluated within the setting of clinical practice, we expect performance parameters to show improvement or a favorable impact on targeted patient outcomes to be demonstrated. Excerpt from expected results section of the provider s mission statement: The expected result of our educational activities is that participating physicians enhance their knowledge and skills in the subject area(s) offered, and apply the knowledge and skills to improve performance and patient outcomes in their practice settings. Educational Planning (C2 - C10) Criterion 2: The provider incorporates into CME activities the educational needs (knowledge, competence, or performance) that underlie the professional practice gaps of their own learners ACCME note about Criterion 2: Provider identifies gaps between current practice or outcomes and desirable or achievable practice or outcomes (i.e., professional practice gaps). The provider deduces needs as the knowledge causes, strategy causes, or performance causes of the professional practice gap(s). The key for compliance is to be able to show ACCME that planning included the identification of a professional practice gap from which needs were identified. A common theme in the noncompliance descriptions is that the ACCME could not find in the description any evidence that a professional practice gap was identified. Professional practice is not limited to clinical, patient care practice but can also include, for example, research practice and administrative practice. Examples of Compliance with Criterion 2: The provider identifies professional practice gaps from national data from peer-reviewed published literature, databases such as Cochrane and registries such as The provider interviews recognized thought leaders in the content Page 2 of 27

3 area related to a practice gap to review the data to determine the underlying needs that are relevant to the target audience and then develops CME activities to address these needs. After a broad subject category is chosen, the provider identifies professional practice gaps in the area through review of new practice guidelines, national data, professional society/college data, and government publications. Participants also complete pre-activity surveys to define their own practice gaps and identify their underlying needs related to the gaps. CME activities then focus to address these needs. Practice gaps are identified by reviewing reports from the CDC, the IOM, daily news clippings related to infectious disease, and from their membership input. The provider also conducts surveys of its membership to assess their needs as related to identified gaps. Examples in the Self Study Narrative describe several CME activities implemented to address a training gap in the use of digital mammography; the gap is based on a study published in the journal "Radiology." The provider developed and demonstrates the use of a Gap Analysis worksheet that identified for their physician learners Best Practice, Current Practice, Resulting Gaps, Gap Cause Deduced (Knowledge, Competence, Performance), Learning Objective, Outcome Indicated (Competence, Performance, Patient Outcomes), and Outcomes Questions. Examples of Noncompliance with Criterion 2: The provider designs courses to assist learners to pass board review courses. However they do not provide evidence of how the board requirements are either a gap in physicians professional practice or are linked to or derived from a gap. The provider provided specimens of information-gathering tools (surveys, evaluation forms, statistical data, and national trends) as evidence of professional practice gaps. These examples did not show that the provider identified knowledge, competence or performance educational needs that underlie any of these gaps. The information presented describes that the provider uses information gathered from past participant evaluations, follow-up surveys, and literature. The evidence does not, however, demonstrate that the provider links this information to professional practice gaps of their learners The provider stated, "We offer CME that is federally or statemandated for physician re-licensure. The fact that the education is mandated indicates that the state or federal health agency has conducted an evaluation and determined there is a gap in professional performance or patient outcomes." However, the provider did not connect these mandates to professional practice gaps of the provider s own learners. The provider describes in its self study report the incorporation of educational needs (knowledge, competence, or performance) that underlie the professional practice gaps of their own learners. However, evidence presented for the activities reviewed did not demonstrate that this occurred consistently in either RSS or non- RSS activities. RSS comprised over 90% of the provider's total physician participants during its current term. Page 3 of 27

4 Example 6. Example 7. The provider described in its self study report a process to identify professional practice gaps by referencing national data regarding patient safety and medical ethics, and the needs that were underlying these gaps. However, the provider did not link the professional practice gaps to their own learners nor articulate educational needs underlying professional practice gaps in terms of knowledge, competence, or performance in the planning process. The provider does not identify professional practice gaps. It identifies educational needs through post-activity surveys and requests from physicians/institutions/healthcare professional groups. The provider referenced the National Healthcare Quality and Disparities Report which discusses "differences in health care quality and access associated with patient race, ethnicity, income, education, and place of residence," but did not relate this report to their learners' professional practice gaps. Criterion 3: The provider generates activities/educational interventions that are designed to change competence, performance, or patient outcomes as described in its mission statement. ACCME note about Criterion 3: This criterion is the implementation of Criterion 2 in the provider s overall program of CME. In the planning of its program of CME activities, the provider must attempt to change physicians competence, performance, or patient outcomes, based on what was identified as needs (that underlie a professional practice gap). The ACCME s expectation is that the education will be designed to change learners strategies (competence), or what learners actually do in practice (performance), or the impact on the patient or on healthcare (patient outcomes.) The ACCME affirms that knowledge is acceptable content for accredited CME. With respect to Criteria 3 and 11, even if the preponderance of a provider s activities is focused solely on changing knowledge, the provider must still show how these activities contribute to the overall program s efforts to change learners competence, or performance or patient outcomes. Examples of Compliance with Criterion 3: Example 6. Activities are designed to change competence through the use of case-based scenarios and an Audience Response System that poses questions about what the learners would do when presented with the case. Activities are designed to change performance (surgical skills lab utilizing models, cadavers) with ultimate goal of improving patient outcomes. The provider designs activities that translate gaps and needs into educational activities intended to change competence, performance and patient outcomes. The provider's planning document juxtaposes identified gaps with a desired result and content to focus meeting a need of knowledge, competence, or performance. The provider provides examples of their activities designed to change knowledge, competence, and performance and provided faculty with tools and instructions on how to incorporate clinical cases into their course curriculum in an effort to move learners beyond changes in knowledge to changes in competence. The provider utilizes didactic lectures and an annual, case-based slide survey for practical skills training in clinical pediatric xxxxx. As part of its planning process, the provider ensures that each activity is designed to change physician strategies that can be applied to practice. The provider measures this outcome by including an evaluation component that asks, Will you make Page 4 of 27

5 Example 7. changes in your practice as a result of this activity? and Please describe a specific change you will make to your practice. The provider directly links objectives to a single professional practice gap it identified as mission critical for its entire CME program. These objectives are consistent with, and support achievement of the CME mission to, improve physician performance with regard to communicating with patients. Examples of Noncompliance with Criterion 3: The provider described in its self study report the generation of activities designed to change competence, performance, or patient outcomes as described in its mission statement. However, there was no evidence of the implementation of this process in the activities reviewed. The provider describes in its self study report and presents evidence that its activities were solely designed to change knowledge. In addition, the provider did not demonstrate that it collected and analyzed data and information to assess the compliance of its program of RSSs (regularly scheduled series) for Criterion 2. RSS comprise over 50% of the provider s total hours of instruction during its current term. Although the provider describes in its self study report the generation of activities designed to change patterns of care and the application of new information, the examples presented in the self study report and in the activities reviewed show evidence only of activities designed to change knowledge, not competence, performance, or patient outcomes. In its self study report and the activities reviewed, the provider presents evidence of activities designed to change knowledge, but no evidence of how these activities or the overall CME program support a change in learners competence, performance, or patient outcomes. Criterion 4: The provider generates activities/educational interventions around content that matches the learners current or potential scope of professional activities. ACCME note about Criterion 4: The provider demonstrates that the content of its CME activities are related to what the learners actually do, or may one day do, in their professional practice. The ACCME allows considerable latitude in this area for material that could be considered, for example, just-in-case CME or theoretical, or discovery, presentations on new knowledge. Examples of Compliance with Criterion 4: The program's New Course Proposal includes a description of how the content of the activity is aligned with the targeted learners' current or potential scope of practice. The provider designs CME activities that match learners' scope of practice. One activity, given as an example, was designed based upon the request of a specialty society for a training course to enable its members to engage in evidence analysis and grading of recommendations for the purpose of writing clinical guidelines. The provider Annual Meeting Program Committee plans its educational activities according to "tracks" which match their learners' current or potential scope of practice with the content. Page 5 of 27

6 Example 6. The provider reports in its self study report that on average, over 91% of their learners are members of the specialty society for its clinical discipline and 93% are affiliated with a cleft/craniofacial team which is what their CME program is about. The provider develops educational offerings to match the scope of practice of its broad constituency by using a content-coding system to assist program planners in their work and learners in organizing their learning based on areas of practice. The provider s process for ensuring that educational activities at its annual meeting are matched to learners scope of practice includes having gap and needs data reviewed by an expert Education Program Committee. The provider shared meeting minutes as evidence that this process was applied to their program s activities. Examples of Noncompliance with Criterion 4: Description and evidence presented by the provider for its non- RSS activities demonstrate Compliance with this Criterion. However, the provider did not demonstrate that it has collected and analyzed data and information to assess the Compliance of its program of RSSs in this area. RSS comprise over 50% of the provider s total hours of instruction during its current term. Criterion 5: The provider chooses educational formats for activities/interventions that are appropriate for the setting, objectives, and desired results of the activity. ACCME note about Criterion 5: All activity formats (eg, didactic, small group, interactive, hands-on skills labs) are perfectly acceptable and must be chosen based on what the provider hopes to achieve with respect to change in competence, performance, and/or patient outcomes. The ACCME is looking for information to demonstrate that the choice of educational format took into account the setting, objectives, and desired results of the activity. Examples of Compliance with Criterion 5: The program designs activities in a number of formats, including, but not limited to, lectures, online programs, home study, small group and panel discussion, case study, simulation, and lab courses. Formats are based on participant feedback or the nature of the content to be delivered. The provider utilizes a variety of formats including live activities built on didactic presentations, enduring materials (some of which are delivered via the Internet), hands-on training, interactive sessions utilizing an audience response system, journal clubs, and moderated morbidity & mortality sessions. The provider has recently established a simulation suite. The provider described the different learning formats it uses, rationales for format choices, strategies used to focus on competence and performance, and the guidance provided by its Education Council in choosing formats. In the self study report, the provider shared its rationale for choosing grand rounds-style speaker programs via podcast, stating, a dynamic interview format gives listeners multiple perspectives to consider and apply to their own practices, making this a valuable educational intervention for oncology healthcare professionals. Page 6 of 27

7 Example 6. Example 7. The provider utilizes its annual meeting to educate members which come from several disciplines. Formats include lectures, keynote addresses, platform presentations, panel discussions, case studies, ethics forums, debates, hands-on study sessions, and eye openers for beginning, intermediate, and advanced learners. In the survey interview, the provider explained that it uses scientific, didactic and case-based presentations in its annual meeting to address different aspects of its learner s professional practice. The provider gives planners a catalog of educational formats and their rationale for appropriate use in a particular type of CME activity. Example of Noncompliance with Criterion 5: Description and evidence presented by the provider for its non- RSS activities demonstrate Compliance with this Criterion. However, the provider did not demonstrate that it has collected and analyzed data and information to assess the Compliance of its program of RSSs in this area.rss comprise over 50% of the provider s total hours of instruction during its current term. In its self study report, the provider indicated that its journals are included in searchable databases, and in activities reviewed, the provider included a copy of a Table of Contents. The provider did not demonstrate with this information, or with any other information, that it chooses educational formats that are appropriate for the setting, objectives and desired results of its activities. Criterion 6: The provider develops activities/educational interventions in the context of desirable physician attributes (eg, IOM competencies, ACGME Competencies). ACCME note about Criterion 6: The ACCME is looking for an active recognition of desirable physician attributes in the planning process ( eg, We have planned to do a set of activities that touch on professionalism and communications to address our patients concerns that they are not receiving complete discharge instructions which is the identified professional practice gap. ). The simple labelling of an activity with a competency is a start and provides the learner with information with which to choose an activity and potentially will be important for reporting purposes within Maintenance of Certification TM. Examples of Compliance with Criterion 6: Activities are developed in terms of competencies (medical knowledge) and specialty-specific competencies. The provider designs activities/educational interventions in the context of a desirable physician attribute on both an individual activity level and a programmatic level. Activities developed based on medical knowledge, evidence-based practice, quality improvement, patient-centered care, interpersonal and communication skills. In its self study report, the provider describes how the themes of its annual meeting are mapped to the ACGME competencies. In its self study report and examples, the provider explains that its Education Committee solicits input from workshop section experts to plan each annual meeting session, where, the experts will assess and assure that workshop content will include information on the various ACGME competencies: medical knowledge, patient care, system's based practice and practice- Page 7 of 27

8 Example 6. based learning in particular. For example, the 3-day Perinatal Pathology Course addresses all of these relevant core competencies. In its activity files, the provider documented the link between desirable physician attributes (IOM, ABMS, AAMC competencies) and the content related to those competencies. Example 7. A table in the provider s self study report maps ACGME competencies against learning objectives from each RSS series. Example 8. The provider uses a new activity application that lists the six ACGME/ABMS competencies, and planners are required to indicate which competencies will be addressed. Examples of Noncompliance with Criterion 6: Description and evidence presented by the provider for its non- RSS activities demonstrate Compliance with this Criterion. However, the provider did not demonstrate that it has collected and analyzed data and information to assess the Compliance of its program of RSSs in this area. RSS comprise over 50% of the provider s total hours of instruction during its current term. Evidence presented in the self study report and in the activities selected for review does not demonstrate that the provider has developed activities in the context of desirable physician attributes. The provider described a list of documents, including standards of training, a suggested outline for technical courses, procedural skills, and technique proficiencies for a specific clinical discipline. However, the provider did not describe a link between these documents and the development of their program of CME. The evidence did not demonstrate that the provider developed activities in the context of desirable physician attributes. The provider s self study report contained a paragraph on how the provider will be collaborating with its medical board organization in the creation of educational modules that focus on professionalism. However, at the time of review for reaccreditation, the provider had not begun development of those modules. The provider described in its self study report that its specialty board has developed an exam and has approved a variety of training courses. However, the provider did not demonstrate with this information, or with other information presented, that it develops activities in the context of desirable physician attributes. ACCME Standards for Commercial Support SM (C7-C10) Criterion 7: The provider develops activities/educational interventions independent of commercial interests. (SCS 1, 2, and 6) ACCME note about Criterion 7: Accredited continuing medical education is always designed and presented in a manner whereby the accredited provider retains control of the content of CME. Providers are expected to ensure that activity planning and implementation is in the hands of the provider. The provider must obtain information from all those in control of content (eg., planners, teachers, and authors) so as to allows for the management and resolution of potential conflicts of interest,. The provider must disclose to learners the relevent financial relationships of all those who control the content of CME. Page 8 of 27

9 Examples of Compliance with Criterion 7: The information submitted describes a planning process that clearly delineates the roles and responsibilities of the provider, its planners and faculty. The provider ensures that there is no control or input from commercial interests. All planners and teachers conflicts of interests have been identified and resolved. Disclosure of relevant, or no, financial relationships to learners has occurred. Examples of Noncompliance with Criterion 7: The provider s commercial support policy, presented as evidence in the self study report, states the provider may request suggestions for presenters or sources of possible presenters from a commercial supporter. This is inconsistent with the ACCME s requirement that a provider must ensure such decisions are made free of the control of a commercial interest. (SCS 1) The provider did not demonstrate that the following decisions were made independent of commercial interests: the identification of CME needs, the determination of educational objectives, the selection and presentation of content, the selection of persons and organizations that will be in a position to control the content of the CME, the selection of educational methods, and the evaluation of the activity were made independently of commercial interests. For example, the provider describes a planning process that involves planners and editors from ACCME-defined commercial interests. At the interview, the provider discussed how some activity topics come from individuals who work for an ACCMEdefined commercial interest that shares office space with the provider. In addition, the provider indicated that it offered commercial supporters a courtesy review of its CME content in order to get supporter feedback. (SCS 1) The provider did not demonstrate independence in its CME activity development. Evidence presented to the ACCME points to a planning process influenced by commercial interests. A potential speaker is identified as preferred for several attributes, including the fact that she may have a relationship with a commercial interest (the same company from which commercial support would be solicited). (SCS 1) In its self study report, performance-in-practice files, and interview, the provider demonstrates that it identifies relevant financial relationships of faculty. However, the provider does not identify relevant financial relationships of planning committee members who are also involved in the content development of its CME activities. Without identifying this information from everyone who is in control of the content of the CME activities, the provider is unable to identify and resolve potential conflicts of interest. In addition, the provider shows that in its CME activities it discloses to learners, only significant financial relationships between faculty speakers and commercial interests. This is not consistent with the ACCME s definition of relevant financial relationships. (SCS2) For its test-item writing activities, the provider did not demonstrate the implementation of a mechanism to identify and resolve conflicts of interest for all persons in control of content, including for example, all faculty, reviewers, and CME committee members. Therefore, not all conflicts of interest could be identified or resolved prior to the activity. (SCS 2) Page 9 of 27

10 Example 6. Example 7. Example 8. Example 9. The provider describes a mechanism to resolve conflicts of interest, but the implementation of a mechanism to resolve conflicts of interest was not consistently documented in the activities reviewed. In addition, evidence was not presented to demonstrate that all individuals in control of CME content disclose relevant financial relationships to the provider.(scs 2) The provider did not have evidence of consistently implementing a mechanism to resolve conflicts of interest when persons in control of content reported relevant financial relationships. The only evidence provided was an attestation form signed by the speaker/planner/staff that stated, I will ensure that any financial relationship that I have with a commercial interest will not effect the recommendations I make about clinical care. Attestation alone is not a mechanism to resolve conflicts of interest.(scs 2) Both in the self study report and the activity files reviewed, the evidence demonstrates that all persons in control of content, including planners and staff, for example, do not consistently disclose the presence of absence of relevant financial relationships to the provider. In addition, the provider defines a commercial interest as any proprietary entity producing health care goods or services, which is not consistent with the ACCME s current definition of a commercial interest. For these reasons, not all conflicts of interest could be identified or resolved. (SCS 2) The evidence presented did not demonstrate that disclosure to learners included the presence or absence of relevant financial relationships for all persons in control of content, including, for example, journal editors or content reviewers. (SCS6) Example 10. In both its live activities and enduring materials, the provider did not consistently disclose to learners the presence or absence of relevant financial relationships of all who control CME content, for example, planners. The provider did not consistently disclose to learners the presence of relevant financial relationships that had been shared with the provider. In addition, when disclosure occurred verbally at the activity, the provider did not consistently have evidence regarding what disclosures were made. (SCS 6) Example 11. The provider did not disclose to learners relevant financial relationships of all persons who control content. The provider s disclosure to learners did not include the name of the commercial interest with which the individual had a relevant financial relationship. (SCS 6) Example 12. The provider did not disclose to learners the relevant financial relationships of all persons who control content, including for example, all faculty, test-item writers and reviewers, and CME committee members. In addition, the provider did not consistently disclose commercial support. (SCS 6) Example 13. The provider uses a "Documentation Review Form for Verbal Disclosure," which lists the "name and role of individual discloser," but in the two activities presented, this is the name of a staffer and not the speaker. It is unclear from these forms what, exactly, is being disclosed to the learner. (SCS 6) Page 10 of 27

11 Criterion 8: The provider appropriately manages commercial support (if applicable, SCS 3 of the ACCME Standards for Commercial Support SM ). ACCME note about Criterion 8: If they chose to accept commercial support, providers are expected to solicit, accept, and use commercial support appropriately and in accord with the parameters of Stanrdard 3 of the ACCME Standards for Commercial Support. Even if the provider does not accept commercial support, the provider is still expected to have policies and procedures in place that govern how (if) they pay honoraria and reimburse expenses for those involved in the planning and presentation of their CME activities. Examples of Compliance with Criterion 8: The provider included a narrative description (supported by performance-in-practice materials) to evidence a comprehensive approach to ensuring the appropriate management of commercial support. The evidence included not only policies and forms that are used, but also examples of the processes being implemented within the provider s commercially-supported activities (eg, communications between the provider and commercial supporter, signed letters of agreement, accounting of activity-related expenditures. Examples of Noncompliance with Criterion 8: For the activities reviewed that accepted commercial support, some written agreements were not present, and some written agreements did not include the signature of the commercial supporter. The provider did not consistently have all written agreements for commercial support signed by both the provider and commercial supporter prior to the activity. The evidence presented for the activities reviewed did not demonstrate that the provider paid honoraria and expenses in compliance with its own policies. In several instances, the provider indicated/assumed the honoraria policy was not applicable because commercial support was not accepted. For its commercially supported activities, the provider had several written agreements that were signed only by the commercial supporter, and not by the provider. Criterion 9: The provider maintains a separation of promotion from education (SCS 4). ACCME note about Criterion 9: Providers must ensure that their learners can participate in educational activities without seeing, reading or hearing promotional or marketing information from commercial interests. Further, accredited providers must ensure that the selling of advertising or exhibit space is a business transaction entirely separate from the acceptance of commercial support for accredited CME. Examples of Compliance with Criterion 9: In the self study narrative, the provider described its processes for ensuring that promotional events at its annual meeting (eg, exhibit halls) are kept distinct and separate from CME activities by not only their location and time in the program schedule, but also in how these events are clearly described as Promotional Examples of Noncompliance with Criterion 9: It was not clear that the provider appropriately maintained a separation of promotion from education. The provider s evidence demonstrated that meetings between learners and industry representatives in a commercial exhibitors hall was considered Page 11 of 27

12 part of their educational activity. Although the exhibits were not in the same room as lectures and video demonstrations, discussion with representatives of the commercial interest at the exhibit was considered by the provider to be part of the learner s CME experience. Criterion 10: The provider actively promotes improvements in health care and NOT proprietary interests of a commercial interest (SCS 5). ACCME note about Criterion 10: Providers are expected to ensure that their CME programs and activities advance the public interest without bias that would influence health professionals to overuse or misuse the products or services of a commercial interest. Examples of Compliance with Criterion 10: The provider demonstrated that all scientific content and clinical recommendations made within CME activities are reviewed by a three member content review council. The criteria for that clinical data and recommendations address valid public health issues as defined by government resources like the Center for Medicare and Medicaid Services and the Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality. Examples of Noncompliance with Criterion 10: The provider presented at least one activity that promoted proprietary interests of a commercial interest. An enduring material CME activity presented in its self study report that focused on the clinical trials of a single drug made by the commercial supporter. The activity did not present a discussion of other therapeutic options. Organizational Self Assessment and Improvement (C11 - C15) Criterion 11: The provider analyzes changes in learners (competence, performance, or patient outcomes) achieved as a result of the overall program s activities/educational interventions. ACCME note about Criterion 11: The provider is asked to analyze the overall changes in competence, performance, or patient outcomes facilitated by their CME program using data and information from each CME activity. Providers who only measure change in knowledge in all their activities will not have any data on change in competence, performance, or patient outcomes to analyze. Examples of Compliance with Criterion 11: The provider collects data about the change in learners competence by using audience response from case studies and skills workshops. The provider uses these data to draw conclusions about its CME program s activities impact on changing physicians competence. The provider conducted an analysis of learner change data. In the activities reviewed, the provider asked learners if they will make a change in practice and for them to describe what they will do differently an explicit expression of a change in their approach (competence). These data are then aggregated and analyzed by the CME Committee. The provider collects and analyzes data about learner change through participant evaluations that happen immediately after the event (by asking what the learners will do differently in their practices) and 12 weeks after the event (by asking what the learners have done). The provider uses these data to draw Page 12 of 27

13 conclusions about the changes in learners competence and performance that have been supported by its CME program s activities. The provider documented pre- and post-activity changes in competence related to multiple CME activities in 2008 and 2009 by using clinical case vignettes, and other mechanisms. The provider also analyzes overall impact of RSSs on such patient outcomes as heart failure management, Vermont Oxford neonatal performance data, and the 5 million lives campaign. The provider measures and documents changes in physician competence through a number of mechanisms including pre- and post-tests and clinical case vignettes. In addition, they presented data on changes on a number of quality and safety gaps as a result of their RSSs. The providers uses three month follow up surveys at the activity level to measure change in competence and performance. The provider included summary data in the self study report across all learners. In addition, the provider produces an annual executive summary of data by therapeutic area. Examples of Noncompliance with Criterion 11: The provider evaluated learner satisfaction but not changes in competence, performance, or patient outcomes. In some activities, the provider asks if the activity will enhance professional effectiveness, which does not allow for the explicit expression of what will change. In addition, the provider did not collect or review any other information about changes in learners competence, performance, or in patient outcomes. The provider, therefore, did not have data to conduct an analysis of changes in learners competence, performance, or changes in patient outcomes that resulted from the provider s program s activities. The provider did not conduct analysis of learner change data. The provider only measures changes in learners knowledge in the evaluation tool utilized. In addition, there is no analysis of the changes in learner competence, performance or patient outcomes across the Program. While the provider evaluates its individual activities for changes in learners competence or performance, the provider did not use these or any other change data in an overall analysis of the changes (physician competence, performance, or patient outcomes) that resulted from the provider s overall program s activities. In its self study report and the activities reviewed, the provider evaluates learner satisfaction and not changes in competence, performance, or patient outcomes. Therefore, the provider did not have data to conduct an analysis of change in learners competence, performance, or patient outcomes. [The provider has started to include a question on its evaluation form asking learners to list a specific change they will make in practice; this may be one way to collect data which will allow for analysis of learner change in the future.] The evidence presented in the self study report and in the activities reviewed demonstrated that the provider evaluated learner satisfaction and whether learning objectives were met. The provider did not present data related to, or an analysis of, changes in physician competence, performance, and/or patient outcomes. Page 13 of 27

14 Criterion 12: The provider gathers data or information and conducts a program-based analysis on the degree to which the CME mission of the provider has been met through the conduct of CME activities/educational interventions. ACCME note about Criterion 12: The provider is asked to integrate C11 information with a broader view of the CME program and organization to determine the program s success at meeting all components of its own CME mission as described in C1 (ie, purpose, content areas, target audience, type of activities, and expected results). Providers that review only activity measures of change (expected results) without looking at the other components of the mission will not be found in compliance by the ACCME. Providers should consider that there are five components to an ACCME-defined mission statement and therefore there are at least five components to an ACCME-defined program-based analysis on the degree to which the CME mission of the provider has been met. There are clear relationships between C11, C12, and C13-15 which relate to improvement plans based on this program-based analysis. Example of Compliance with Criterion 12: The provider conducted an overall program evaluation and concluded that all components of its mission statement were being met. The provider demonstrated that it has fulfilled its purpose of enhancing professional development, achieved learning objectives and changed physicians competence, reached its target audience, provided CME in the content areas and with the types of activities stated in its mission statement. In reviewing the extent to which its CME program addressed the five components of its mission statement, the provider recognized that it had been designing activities to change learner knowledge, but not competence, performance, and/or patient outcomes (as required by Criterion 1, Expected Results and Criterion 3). It also found that it did not know if the activities designed to change knowledge contributed to changing competence or performance or patient outcomes as stipulated in its mission statement. In its self study narrative and survey interview, the provider acknowledged this issue and articulated changes it would make to its planning processes to ensure that activities are designed to change learners competence, performance, and/or patient outcomes. In its self study report, the provider concluded that it had fulfilled its purpose, to improve interdisciplinary care of persons with clefts and craniofacial anomalies; had been successful in, making professionals aware of new clinical and research information, and achieved a portion of its expected results of, updating the knowledge and skills of physicians in both their own disciplines and in the other disciplines with which they provided care. The provider conducted an overall program evaluation and concluded that all components of its mission statement were being met. The provider demonstrated that it has fulfilled its purpose of enhancing professional development, achieved learning objectives and changed physicians competence, reached its target audience, provided CME in the content areas and with the types of activities stated in its mission statement. The provider excerpted minutes from the annual meeting of its CE committee in which the group evaluated the degree to which the organization had met each of the elements of its mission statement. Page 14 of 27

15 Examples of Noncompliance with Criterion 12: Data and information was not presented to demonstrate that the provider conducts a program-based analysis on the degree to which the CME mission has been met. The provider did not address the degree to which the program has achieved expected results as articulated in terms of competence, performance, or patient outcomes. Data and information presented did not relate to the CME mission. The provider s method for overall program analysis is a survey of their membership as to their satisfaction with the CME program. Information was provided about the organization s operational function but this was not related to an evaluation of the extent to which the CME mission was fulfilled. For example, the organization does a SWOT analysis and has a comprehensive strategic planning process associated with annual retreat, but this does not address the CME mission or CME program. The provider s program-based analysis on the degree to which the CME mission has been met did not address expected results based on data that would support an analysis of changes in learners competence, performance or patient outcomes. The provider did not present, and was unable to describe, any data from which it could determine whether or not it was meeting its purpose as described in the organization s mission statement. The evidence provided fails to demonstrate that the provider presently performs program analyses to evaluate how it is meeting its mission. In particular, the provider has not provided information or analysis on the extent to which it has achieved the expected results outlined in its mission statement. Criterion 13: The provider identifies, plans and implements the needed or desired changes in the overall program (eg, planners, teachers, infrastructure, methods, resources, facilities, interventions) that are required to improve on ability to meet the CME mission. ACCME note about Criterion 13: The provider identifies its own professional practice gaps in terms of its performance as a CME provider - and creates a strategic plan for organizational improvement, based on the insights from C11 and 12. Examples of Compliance with Criterion 13: The provider has described several changes including an electronic disclosure and COI system, a moderator evaluation process, expanded use of the audience response system, a restructuring of the skills model lab, and additional improvements in the evaluation system. In its self study narrative, the provider recognized that it failed to measure changes in learners competence, performance, and/or patient outcomes in its CME activities, making it impossible to analyze changes in competence, performance, and/or patient outcomes as required by Criterion 11. The provider described in its self study narrative and survey interview an improvement plan that it created to rectify the issue in future activity planning and evaluation. In its self study report, the provider describes an improvement plan based on reports that determine if they are maintaining attendee levels from primary disciplines in team care, activity evaluations that determine whether to continue with certain educational formats and exhibits, debriefing meetings after the Page 15 of 27

16 annual meeting to identify process or logistics areas for improvement, and membership surveys to determine why nonparticipants do not attend the annual meeting. The provider describes the identification, planning, and implementation of a list of changes designed to better achieve its mission. Examples include: improved evaluation forms that capture change data; post-meeting surveys; accessing quality improvement databases; outreach efforts to general pathologists to include them in their target audience for CME activities. The provider described the following five changes it will implement as a result of its analysis on how it was meeting its CME mission: (1) purchasing an association management system to track learners; (2) using new software to connect with learners before and after CME activities; (3) identification of a "best practice" planning document; (4) having the CME/MOC Committee review the overall CME program to include how well the organization was achieving its CME mission; and (5) changing the evaluation rating scale. Examples of Noncompliance with Criterion 13: The provider did not present information to demonstrate that they have identified changes required to improve their ability to meet the CME mission. The provider indicated that upon review of its effectiveness, no changes or improvements were required. However, noncompliance findings in other Criteria indicate there are, in fact, improvements that could be made. Criterion 14: The provider demonstrates that identified program changes or improvements, that are required to improve on the provider s ability to meet the CME mission, are underway or completed. ACCME note about Criterion 14: described in Criterion 13. The provider demonstrates the implementation of the change plans Examples of Compliance with Criterion 14: The provider has demonstrated a number of changes that are underway or have already been completed. These changes include improved pre-activity questionnaires, inclusion of Q&A sessions, expansion of master's classes, and a searchable web page of scholarly works. The provider has demonstrated the institution of a learning management system in July 2008 and provided results of the beta testing of the system. The provider states that to expand visibility, it has introduced online programming that will be available soon. The provider also developed new standards for interdisciplinary team care and conducted a pilot program with five teams. Two of the teams have already reported some changes in patient outcomes. The provider included a "CE Advisory Council Educational Effectiveness Checklist" in a few of its activity files in support of Criterion 14. This reflects a change made at the programmatic level that is demonstrated in its activity files. CE Council members are asked to observe and evaluate an activity in real time and provide feedback to the provider. Page 16 of 27

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